Grand Jury / Federal Agency Subpoenas

Responding to a grand jury or a federal investigation subpoena involves far more than furnishing information to the investigating authorities. While responding to subpoenas and provding witnesses are important and required parts of dealing with a grand jury or federal agency investigation, successfully navigating the perils associated with an active investigation requires much more, including:

Preparing a strategic course for collecting and producing documents typically requested by a federal agency or prosecuter on behalf of a grand jury;

Discovering and analyzing the information being provided to the federal agency or grand jury from all sources to glean all the nuances of the case the prosecution is attempting to build;

Developing theories of defense to the charges being investigated;

Managing the intricacies of communications with other possible subjects or targets of the investigation and developing effective formal joint defense agreements;

Filing motions before the appropriate court when the prosecution overreaches, or taking other steps to minimize the burdens and disruption of an investigation;

Directly engaging with prosecutors who will make charging decisions to negotiate the terms under which testimony will be provided to the grand jury, including proffers and immunity, and to press legal and factual theories; and

If needed, advocating against charges being brought, through discussions with and presentations to the prosecutors and their superiors in a U.S. Attorney’s Office, the Department of Justice or relevant federal and/or state agency.

On behalf of corporate and individual clients, The Law Offices of Mark Jay Krum have conducted internal investigations to assess potential exposure for a client both proactively and in reaction to a government investigation, handled substantial document productions involving thousands of documents reviewed and produced, managed mulit-year, multi-target grand jury investigations involving numerous witnesses and worked with prosecuting and investigating agencies, in many instances to avoid indictment.

DISCLAIMER

This web site is designed for general information only. The information presented at this site should not be construed to be formal legal advice nor the formation of a lawyer/client relationship.